[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 153 (2007), Part 14]
[House]
[Pages 19102-19103]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




    SPEAKING THE TRUTH: OPPOSING UNTRUE STATEMENTS ABOUT THE BUDGET

  The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under a previous order of the House, the 
gentlewoman from North Carolina (Ms. Foxx) is recognized for 5 minutes.
  Ms. FOXX. Mr. Speaker, this weekend I noticed one of my colleagues in 
the majority on the Senate side on Fox News Sunday discussing our 
Nation's Iraq policy. In his conversation with Brit Hume he asserted 
that our Iraq policy was a failure because of limited progress on the 
political front in Iraq.
  Mr. Hume challenged him on this point by pointing out that progress 
has been made recently in other areas of Iraq. Mr. Hume noted that if a 
lack of political progress in Iraq was the only thing that mattered, 
then couldn't people call the Democrats a failure because of their 
dismal record on enacting their priorities this session of Congress? 
The Senator from Michigan responded by drumming up a list of Democrat 
success, the first of which I find to be entirely dubious.
  He attempted to prove that the majority party has not been a complete 
failure by first saying the Democrats have adopted a budget for the 
first time in years.
  Mr. Hume had asked him, ``My understanding is that you got the 
minimum wage increase, but nothing else passed. Does that make you a 
failure?''
  The Senator responded, ``Well, no, because it is not true. There is a 
lot of things that have passed. For the first time in years we have 
adopted a budget.''
  I am not sure if he has been in the same Congress that I have been 
serving in. He makes it look like it has been years since we passed a 
budget, and that is simply not true. In 2005, a budget resolution 
passed the House and the Senate as well as a conference report. In 2006 
a budget resolution also passed the House and the Senate without an 
accompanying conference report.
  So I am a little confused as to where the Senator is getting his 
facts. Unfortunately, Mr. Hume did not catch the untrue statement. As a 
result, the millions of Americans watching the popular Sunday news 
program were led to believe that somehow the fact that the majority has 
adopted a budget resolution was an unusual feat, unseen for years in 
Congress. I wish to set the record straight.
  Some people might wonder why I call attention to this. My reasoning 
is simple: The truth matters. When we allow untrue statements to enter 
the public record, we have allowed the public to be led astray. Those 
to whom we are accountable deserve so much better. The American people 
deserve the whole truth, the whole picture, not half truths or dodgy 
statements intended to cloud a less than stellar record of 
accomplishment.
  I will give the Senator from Michigan the benefit the doubt. Maybe he 
really thought that it has been years since Congress adopted a budget. 
But if that is the case we have an equally large problem; he can't keep 
his facts straight. Both problems serve to mislead the American people.
  Fortunately, at this point I don't think the American people have 
been too misled. They know that this majority has quickly established 
itself as the party of broken promises. Recent polls tell the whole 
story. Since taking office, the majority's job approval ratings have 
taken a nosedive. It is not a

[[Page 19103]]

temporary dip either. Ever since January, their approval ratings have 
consistently trended negative, dropping from 37 percent to a low of 23 
percent. These sorts of ratings are so low that they have even turned 
heads in Washington, where unpopularity in the polls seems to be a way 
of life. I will submit for the Record a chart showing the plummeting of 
the Democrat job approval.
  But I am concerned about the public dialogue at stake. If 
Congressional leaders can't be trusted with the basic facts and insist 
on creating a track record of truth distortion and promise breaking, I 
see it as my duty to voice opposition. Even if I am the only one 
raising the alarm, I will continue to call for integrity in all aspects 
of public life, and especially in that most important of arenas, 
communicating with the American people.
  The facts are important. The American people deserve the respect that 
comes with not taking liberties with the facts.

                          ____________________